A longitudinal observation of general psychopathology before the COVID-19 outbreak and during lockdown in Italy

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2020.110328Get rights and content

Highlights

  • COVID-19 impacted on many daily living aspects and self-perceived mental health.

  • There was an increase in depression and phobic anxiety during the lockdown.

  • Interpersonal sensitivity and paranoid ideation decreased during the lockdown.

  • Economic damage was associated with psychological and behavioural deteriorations.

  • Pre-lockdown psychopathology predicted the likelihood of PTSD symptoms onset.

Abstract

Objective

Italy has been largely involved by the COVID-19 pandemic. The present study aimed at evaluating the impact of the lockdown during the pandemic on mental health adopting both a longitudinal and a cross-sectional design. Accordingly, the study investigated general psychopathology a few weeks before the COVID-19 outbreak (T0) and during lockdown (T1), and the associations between lockdown-related environmental conditions, self-perceived worsening in daily living and psychopathology.

Methods

130 subjects (aged 18–60 years) were included in the longitudinal design, and an additional subsample of 541 subjects was recruited for the in-lockdown evaluation. Socio-demographic data and the Brief Symptom Inventory were collected both at T0 and T1. Moreover, at T1 an online survey was administered for the evaluation of lockdown-related environmental conditions and self-perceived variations in daily living induced by quarantine, along with the Impact of Event Scale-Revised.

Results

Longitudinal analysis showed that phobic anxiety and depressive symptoms increased at T1 as compared with T0, whereas interpersonal sensitivity and paranoid ideation decreased. Pre-existing general psychopathology predicted COVID-19-related post-traumatic symptomatology. Cross-sectional analyses underlined that self-perceived deteriorations in various areas of daily living were associated with general and post-traumatic psychopathology, and with several lockdown-related conditions, especially economic damage.

Conclusion

The present study underlined a different trend of increased internalizing and decreased interpersonal symptoms during COVID-19 quarantine in Italy. Furthermore, the results showed that subjects with pre-existing psychopathology and those reporting economic damage during the pandemic were more likely to develop deterioration of their mental health.

Keywords

Covid-19
Post-traumatic stress disorders
Lockdown
Quarantine
Pandemic
Depression

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